Apparently, just because you can do, it doesn't mean you can teach. Even in sports like hockey, where women have played with men at the professional level, female coaches are as rare as Kardashians who don't make millions marrying basketball players on television. In fact, it wasn't until 2009 that Nancy Lieberman, a former professional player herself, became the first woman to coach an NBA team (the Texas Legends, part of the NBA development league). According to Sonya Cuthbert, a reporter for the Calgary Herald, utilizing female coaches is just good business, seeing as women actually make pretty good coaches. Who knew! She says, "The most glorified coaches in college and high school basketball are women. They have more wins than any male coach of either men's or women's teams." So why aren't more of these winning coaches doing their thing at the professional level?

A common argument against dudes being coached by the fairer sex is that male athletes couldn't possibly be expected to listen to a woman instruct them on their layups. Which makes sense, because come on, they're athletes. They're so tall and broad-shouldered. Even if they could bend down low enough to talk to a female coach, they wouldn't be able to hear her. Their ears simply can't register frequencies that high-pitched!

Then again, maybe we should give the dudes a little more credit. As one of Lieberman's male players put it, "I've never had a women tell me what to do on the court before [Lieberman]. But she knows what she's talking about."